NAB News
https://amplify.nabshow.com/articles/how-social-media-and-tv-advertising-boosts-content-discovery/
How viewers discover content can be a mystery, even to them,
but advertising is key as are recommendations from friends and family or within
the streaming service itself while smarter use of social media is a must.
It’s the complexity of the streaming content and device
landscape a challenge for the discovery of new, quality content and an even
bigger challenge for content providers.
A new report from Conviva, “State of Streaming: Content Discovery,”
suggests that 38% viewers find a new show “by chance.”
It also gives some tactical advice for what content
providers can do about it.
First up: advertising remains critical, provided the mix of
advertising, targeting techniques, and creative units is adjusted to maximize
streaming engagement.
Get it right and content providers can tap a $30
billion upside that exists in streaming advertising while better engaging
their viewers.
When it comes to which medium to invest in for the most
successful advertising, most respondents to the Conviva survey reported seeing
an ad on TV, followed by 20% saying they saw the ad on social media. Up to 65%
of long-form video is still consumed on the big screen. This suggests 30-second
ads remain viable. Conversely, five- to 10-second ad units are better for
smaller devices where 42% of shorter content is consumed on mobile phones.
Next, the report illustrates a direct correlation between
high social media usage and high streaming video consumption, showing social
platforms are key to new content discovery.
The average number of social media platforms used by a
typical consumer is 3.4 while this number jumps to 3.9 for heavy streamers (and
plummets to 2.3 for non-streamers). What’s more, high social media users are
more than twice as likely to spend more than eight hours per day streaming.
The report further broke down word of mouth, the top overall
source for streaming discovery, to reveal significant social media influence
including friends talking about content on social media (20%), recommendations
by a friend on social media (18%) and recommendations by a celebrity or
influencer on social media (11%). In person word of mouth, including friend or
family recommendations (34%) and friends talking about content in person (27%),
was important also.
Summing up Keith Zubchevich, CEO, Conviva, said: “By
leveraging advertising, recommendations and social media to curate and promote
their offerings, publishers can expose viewers to new, quality content while
simultaneously increasing their reach and brand loyalty.”
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